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NORTH RAMSDEN FARM

WALSDEN

   
This area of Walsden is on the western side of the valley and today is accessed via Ramsden Wood Road, which takes you up the narrow clough, past the old mills of Ramsden and Spring Bottoms, and upwards to Ramsden North Farms. They stand on a track, which in days gone by was the main route leading from the many farms on Inchfield Moor down to the valley bottom at Bottoms in Walsden. The view to the rear of the farms looks out over Inchfield.
   
There were two adjoining farmhouses on the site, both known as North Ramsden. By the 1760's, the farm was held by Samuel Holden and then by his son James. James was still farming North Ramsden in 1841 at the age of 70 with his second wife, Ann.
   

After the death of old James Holden, this part of the farm was taken on by Thomas Wood, and later by his son John.

   
Before 1820, James Crossley moved across the valley from Bottomley to Ramsden North with his wife Sally and five children. His sixth and last child, Jimmy, was born at Ramsden on 6th February 1820. James died four years later and his widow married Robert Newell. Together they took over this part of the farm. They are there in 1841 along with James Holden.
   
Following the death of his mother, Jimmy Crossley took over the farm. Jimmy supplemented his farming income with weaving. He and his wife, Mary Crowther, had 11 children although six of these died in infancy. In 1871, James and Mary buried three children within four days of each other, two of them on the same day. It is likely this was from smallpox as there was an epidemic at the time.
   
The Woods and the Crossleys were together at Ramsden North for over 40 years. John Wood retired and moved down to Staff Row at Bottoms. Jimmy died at Ramsden a few days after the 1891 census was taken.
   
A more recent resident of North Ramsden was Leonard Greenwood. Len was a well-known personality in and around Walsden. He and his sheep dog, Sweep, made the headlines in the Rochdale Observer about 1975:
   

One Man and his Dog.


The trust between a man and his dog was never more apparent than at Littleborough Cricket Ground on Monday when the 6th annual sheep dog trials were held in wet and windy conditions. Pictured are Mr Len Greenwood of Ramsden Farm Walsden and his 3-year-old dog Sweep, which appeared in the television serial Joe and the Sheep Rustlers.

   
Len also appeared on Esther Rantzen's "That's Life" television programme with a comical story about him having some special teeth made so he could whistle his dog during the sheep dog trials. He died in 1978 aged 84.
   
Today, there are four separate cottages at North Ramsden. The first one you arrive at has a date stone showing it was re-built by JE 1897.
   

NORTH RAMSDEN LINKS

NORTH RAMSDEN CENSUS TRANSCRIPTION 1841 TO 1901

 

I am indebted to Richard Holt for the photograph and information about

his great grandfather Leonard Greenwood.

 

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